Runescores in [Cage(d) Time] | Strategies of Scoring Indeterminacy
Joséphine A. Garibaldi & Paul Zmolek
Runescores[1], directed by Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, Artistic Directors of Callous Physical Theatre, is a group-sourced collaborative project of performance scores structured in response to each of twenty-five rune stones of the Norwegian Runic System. In the egalitarian spirit of Fluxus, a non-curated call to participate was published via social media. Participants received one of the scores determined by drawing a rune from the bag. From this, collaborators solved the score, creating responses in the medium(s) of their choice and submitted digital files for this online installation.
Contributing artists (in alphabetical order) include Logan Castro, Bridget Close, Joséphine A. Garibaldi, Robert W. Dillon, Jr., Aaron Ellis, Mandy Herrick, Gary Lappier, Katie Stricker Lappier, Aigars Larionovs, Julie Leir-VanSickle, David Ollington, Cathy Santome, Jennifer Wolbrecht, Gary Zmolek, and Paul Zmolek.
How Runescores Emerged
Spring 2020, rummaging through the bins in the depths of our closets, Jo uncovered Paul’s new age bundle of Rune Stones, Tarot cards, and crystals that had been in storage since the ‘80s. The stones and cards were placed on the dining table, thinking that we could maybe utilize them in our artistic research. Preparations for our Cagevent 2{020}: Sometimes it works, Sometimes it doesn’t Redux at the {Re}HAPPENING[2] at the historic site of the Black Mountain College included a revisiting of Fluxus events, John Cage’s seminal book Silence: Lectures and Writings[3] and William Fetterman’s incredibly detailed John Cage’s Theatre Pieces: Notations and Performances.[4] Unfortunately {Re}HAPPENING had to be canceled due to the pandemic but our research sparked an interest in exploring Cage’s aleatoric approach to creating non-determinant scores structured with time brackets for actions to occur. Neither of us are familiar with the I Ching (John Cage’s oracular device), but we had the tarot cards and the rune stones and a “why don’t we” challenge quickly emerged. The seventy-eight cards in the tarot deck were a bit whelming so we opted for the smaller collection of twenty-five runes and Runescores emerged.
The Process
Scores corresponding to each of the runes were created. The draw of fifteen stones (determined by the number of operations that fit neatly on the line paper in Paul’s notebook) ordered the score of actions. Guided by Ralph Blum’s The Book of Runes,[5] actions were defined by ‘significant’ words (a technique from our dialogic devising[6] methodology) extracted from Blum’s description of each corresponding rune (the interpretation of each significant word is always the problem the collaborating artist must solve). Based upon the number of the rune (as presented by Blum) and following the structural logic of John Cage’s time brackets, the timing of each event was progressively notated as either positive or negative: if a rune drawn was upright, time was notated as positive; if the rune drawn was reversed, time was notated as negative. The shortest score is 1:26, the longest score is 5:19.
For the entire Runescore project, go here: http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescores-2020.html. While each individual work is complete in itself, viewing all of the works successively with their accompanying process statements provides a fuller sense of the project as a unified work. Navigate the site via stone icons and the sidebar. A larger screen and headphones are recommended for best viewing experience.
The Presentation
(Text of script follow below.)
Script of Presentation
Script of Presentation
[1] Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, “Runescores: The Project and The Process,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescores-2020.html.
[2] “2020 {Re}HAPPENING,” Black Mountain College Museum and Arts Center, http://rehappening.com/2020-artist-lineup/.
[3] Cage, John, Silence Lectures and Writings (Middletown, Conn: Wesleyan University Press, 2013).
[4] Fetterman, William, John Cage’s Theatre Pieces: Notations and Performances (New York: Routledge, 1996).
[5] Blum, Ralph, The Book of Runes (St. Martin’s Press, 1984).
[6] Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, “Academic Articles and Presentations,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 10, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/academic-articles–presentations.html.
[7] Joséphine A. Garibaldi, “Runescore 1 Mannaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-1-mannaz.html.
[8] Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, “Runescores: The Project and The Process,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescores-2020.html.
[9] Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, “Runescore 2 Gebo,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-2-gebo.html.
[10] David Ollington, “Runescore 3 Ansuz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-3-ansuz.html.
[11] Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, “Entr’act a la Runescores,” Callous Physical Theatre, December 5, 2021, video, 7:48, https://youtu.be/FUE9bEMXi-c.
[12] Julie Leir-VanSickle, “Runescore 4 Othila,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-4-othila.html.
[13] Cathy Santome, “Runescore 5 Uruz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-5-uruz.html.
[14] Jennifer Wolbrecht, “Runescore 6 Perth,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-6-perth.html.
[15] Joséphine A. Garibaldi, “Runescore 7 Nauthiz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-7-nauthiz.html.
[16] “Runescore 18 Inguz” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-8-inguz.html.
[17] Aaron Ellis, “Runescore 9 Eiwaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-9-eiwaz.html.
[18] “Runescore 10 Algiz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-10-algiz.html.
[19] Paul Zmolek, “Runescore 11 Fehu,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-11-fehu.html.
[20] Joséphine A. Garibaldi, “Runescore 12 Wunjo,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-12-wunjo.html.
[21] Katie Stricker Lappier, “Runescore 13 Jera,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-13-jera.html.
[22] Paul Zmolek, “Runescore 14 Kano,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-14-kano.html.
[23] William Fetterman, John Cage’s Theatre Pieces: Notations and Performances (New York: Routledge, 1996).
[24] Ralph Blum, The Book of Runes (St. Martin’s Press, 1984).
[25] Paul Zmolek, “Runescore 15 Teiwaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-15-teiwaz.html.
[26] Bridget Close, “Runescore 16 Berkana,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-16-berkana.html.
[27] Gary Lappier, “Runescore 17 Ehwaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-17-ehwaz.html.
[28] Robert W. Dillon, Jr., “Runescore 18 Laguz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-18-laguz.html.
[29] Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek, “Runescore 19 Hagalaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-19-hagalaz.html.
[30] Logan Castro, “Runescore 20 Raido,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-20-raido.html.
[31] Julie Leir-VanSickle, “Runescore 21 Thurisaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-21-thurisaz.html.
[32] Mandy Herrick, “Runescore 22 Dagaz,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-22-dagaz.html.
[33] Aigars Larionovs, “Runescore 23 Isa,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-23-isa.html.
[34] Gary Zmolek, “Runescore 24 Sowelu,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-24-sowelu.html.
[35] John Cage, Silence: Lectures and Writings (Middletown, Conn: Wesleyan University Press, 2013),12.
[36] Mandy Herrick, “Runescore 25 Odin,” Callous Physical Theatre, accessed December 9, 2021, http://callousphysicaltheatre.weebly.com/runescore-25-odin.html.
Callous Physical Theatre: Joséphine A. Garibaldi and Paul Zmolek are dedicated to fostering collaboration through a dialogic practice of artmaking, research, and pedagogy. Callous Physical Theatre is a collaborative, project- based endeavor guided by the slogan, “We go where the work takes us.”